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stramenopile

Stramenopiles, also called heterokonts, are a diverse lineage of eukaryotes within the SAR supergroup. They include both photosynthetic organisms such as diatoms and brown algae and heterotrophic groups such as the water molds (oomycetes), making the group one of the most ecologically and economically important lineages of algae and fungus-like organisms.

A hallmark of many stramenopiles is the heterokont condition: during certain life stages they bear two flagella

Major lineages include diatoms (Bacillariophyta), which have intricate silica cell walls; brown algae (Phaeophyceae), which form

Ecology and significance: stramenopiles are major contributors to photosynthetic productivity in aquatic ecosystems. Diatoms play a

of
different
types—one
long
and
smooth
(whiplash)
and
one
shorter,
densely
hairy
(tinsel).
Their
plastids
typically
arose
by
secondary
endosymbiosis
with
red
algae,
and
cell
walls
are
commonly
cellulose-rich.
Nutritional
modes
are
diverse,
including
photosynthesis,
absorptive
heterotrophy,
and
mixotrophy.
large
seaweeds
and
kelp
forests;
golden
algae
(Chrysophyceae)
and
yellow-green
algae;
and
oomycetes
(oomycota),
the
water
molds
that
are
important
plant
pathogens
and
saprotrophs.
The
group
spans
life
cycles
from
unicellular
plankton
to
complex
multicellular
thalli,
with
varying
reproductive
strategies.
key
role
in
global
carbon
cycling
and
silica
deposition,
while
brown
algae
support
kelp
forest
ecosystems.
Oomycetes
include
several
important
plant
pathogens.
Taxonomically,
stramenopiles
are
placed
within
the
SAR
supergroup;
historically
they
were
grouped
with
other
protists
and,
in
older
classifications,
were
sometimes
treated
as
a
separate
kingdom,
Chromista.